New Street Drugs - Broward County!

NEW STREET DRUGS
25I-NBOME, 25C-NBOME, AND
25B-NBOME
David Becker
Joseph Maguire
BACKGROUND
The full name of the drug is 25I-NBOMe and it’s
classified as a designer hallucinogen or a
psychedelic. This drug, and many legal drugs, is
a Serotonin agonist. An increase in serotonin in
the brain improves mood, which why the high is
so euphoric.
 This manufactured drug is produced from the
phenethylamine compound. Phenethylamine is
found in some plants and even chocolate. It has
very mild effects in this state. However, after
manufacturing, 25C or Dime it similar to LSD.
Users say the high is similar to that of LSD,
Ecstasy, or a hit of acid, but has a shorter
duration. Usually 6-10 hours instead of 12 hours.

STREET NAMES
25C – slightly different drug, but name is used
interchangeably
 Dime
 N-Bomb
 25I
 Smiles
 25B

HOW ITS TAKEN
Snorted/Insufflated
 Placed on or under tongue or in cheeks
 Smoked, with or without other substances
 Liquid in the eye cavity

HOW ITS SUPPLIED



25C is supplied in different ways. It was shipped as a powder and a
distributor would place it in capsules. The user would then break
open the capsules and snort the drug. The drug would have no effect
if the capsule was swallowed. One gram of 25C-NBOMe could cost as
little as 100 USD plus shipping from Germany. And of course, sold
under the pretense of “Not Suitable for Human Consumption”.
Unknown if the powder was cut with another substance or how many
micrograms were in each capsule. These capsules were usually
purchased in Canada and shipped to the US for distribution.
More recently, the 25C is blotted on a very small square of thin
cardboard. The dose is usually from 325 mcg to 600 mcg. Some users
can feel the effects with a small dose while others must use 1000 1200 mcg to get their high. Pricing varies, the cost is anywhere from
$1 to $10 US per blotter. The user places the blotter under his tongue
or between cheek and gum for slow absorption. If the absorption of
25C is too fast the high is too intense (overdose) and the duration too
short.
These substances have also been encountered as powders, liquids,
and laced on food items.
IMAGES
IMAGES
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS






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
The user that OD’s on a Dime acts similarly to a
cocaine overdose. These actions include 1. Aggressiveness
2. Disorientation
3. Disruptive behavior
4. Unrelated statements
5. Screaming
6. Poor perception of time
7. Hyperthermia
8. Cardiac effects of increase in HR and BP
9. Dilated pupils
10. Hot, wet, flushed skin
11. Seizures
12. Death
TREATMENT
FOLLOW COLLIER EMS EXCITED
DELIRIUM PROTOCOL
 Manage aggressiveness with just enough force to
maintain control and scene safety. Hyperthermia
will rapidly increase while fighting, so cool these
patients quickly and administer Versed IN or IV
(PLEASE REVIEW PROTOCOL FOR DOSAGE)
to reduce or eliminate agitation and
aggressiveness.
 These patients may become very violent and
exhibit extreme agitation.
 Above all be CAREFUL and be SAFE!

ADDITIONAL CONSIDERATIONS

Patients under the influence of the drugs
mentioned in this document often display bizarre.
reckless behavior and have been noted to run
through sliding glass doors or onto a highway full
of fast moving vehicles. Medics should exercise
due caution when requesting air support to
transport trauma alert patients under the
influence of drugs like 25C, bath salts, LSD, or
other potentially hallucinogenic substances.
ADDITIONAL
Locally we have encountered what we believe to
be 25-I in at least 2 and possibly as many as 6
patients. Most of these patients were between
16-19 years of age.
 There are numerous (45) reports of death in the
medical literature attributed to use of this drug
in the past year.
 Cause of death is often brain hemorrhage
 Many of these patients also tested positive for
other drugs including Ecstasy, Bath Salts,
Cocaine, Heroin, and Acetyl Fentanyl

ADDITIONAL

Emergency departments continue to publish
cases of severe toxicity due to these substances.
Reports from medical examiners and toxicology
labs link some combination of 25I-NBOMe, 25CNBOMe, and25B-NBOMe to the death of at least
14 individuals, aged 15 to 29 years, in the U.S.
between March 2012 and April 2013.
FINAL WORD OF CAUTION


25I or related substance pose an additional risk to
first responders – the drug can be accidentally
absorbed into the skin or accidentally inhaled when
handling it. BE CAREFUL!
SCENE SAFETY and UNIVERSAL PRECAUTIONS!
“…If one of these compounds is in pure powder form,
small breezes, accidental inhalation, or touching the
eyes or mouth after handling could result in fullblown effects or dangerous overdoses. Because of
these dangers, NBOMe series chemicals should be
labeled clearly and handled with laboratory methods
(goggles, gloves, mask) to minimize risks. “ - DEA
Special Testing and Research Laboratory
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
Contact
Collier County EMS Training Department
239.252.3740
nbc12.com
Kids overdosing o n n e w drug
b y La u r a Geller - b i o
Iemail
• o r i g i n a l (http://www .nbc12 .com/story/16964534/kids-overdosing-on-new-drug)
RICHMOND, VA (WWBT) - NBC12 has a frightening
warning for parents. There's a hot new designer drug
on the streets and students right here in the metro-area
are using and abusing it.
It's a hallucinogenic called 25i. NBC12 received some
calls from parents concerned about this new
drug. Turns out Richmond Ambulance Authority crews treated five overdose cases
last weekend alone.
25i is new to the streets of Central Virginia and new to medics arriving on scene last
weekend in Richmond. Five patients were all experiencing effects similar to other
hallucinogenic drugs, according to Lt. Jennifer Reese.
"Violence, episodes of depression, they were unaware of their person, place and time,"
she described. "We also had one that was experiencing seizure activity."
RAA has learned two of the patients actually had bleeding in the brain after
overdosing.
"It's extremely dangerous," Reese said.
For parents the question is: what is it? Reese, who also has a bio-chemistry
background, began researching the drug so her crews would know what they're
dealing with on a call. She said it does not have FDA approval.
"It's an experimental drug that was being used to research the path of brainwaves
with stimulation," she explained.
The drug is a dark colored powder that can be smoked or snorted.
Reese said one of the more frightening aspects is that 25i is a simple chemical
structure, meaning it can be easily manufactured right here.
Once inhaled there's no going back, explained Martin's Regional Pharmacy Manager
John Beckner.
"I don't know that anybody knows what the long term effects are but certainly the
short term or dramatic effects could be coma or death," he cautioned.
The results are unpredictable and will be different in each person.
Reese said so far, she's heard of one documented case of a patient going into heart
failure after overdosing on 25i.
Copyright 2012 WWBT NBC12. All rights reserved.
Oriidnal URL:
http'://www.nbc12.com/ story/ 16964534/kids-overdosing-on-new-drug
nydailynews.com
New drug N-bomb hits the street,
terrifying parents, troubling cops
The synthetic hallucinogen - also called 'Smiles,' 25-i, and 25lNBOMe
- has already led to 5 deaths in states including Arizona, North Dakota
and Louisiana.
by Deborah Hastings/ NEW YORK DAILY NEWS • May 6, 2 0 1 3
•
original
(http://www .nydailynews .com/news/national/new-synthetic-hallucinogen-n-bomb-killing-users-cops-article-1 .1336327?
print)
A particularly dangerous new street drug is terrifying parents and troubling police
departments across the country.
Called the "N-bomb," this synthetic hallucinogen has killed at least five people in
states including Arizona, North Dakota and Louisiana.
I t also goes by the name "Smiles," 25-i, and 25INBOMe.
It's particularly popular as an alternative form of LSD, but is potentially more
dangerous because its simple chemical makeup can be reproduced by anyone with a
basic knowledge of chemistry, police say.
Susan Wadsworth of Scottsdale, Ariz., knows only too well how dangerous it can be.
Her 18-year-old son, Noah Carrasco, accepted a hit of N-bom b in the form of a nose
drop. He passed out and a friend drove him around, trying to sober him up.
"He'd been dead already at least for a couple of hours," Wadsworth told a local
television station in an interview posted online Monday.
"They didn't know that that's what they were taking," she said of the January
overdose. "My son was not a reckless person. He decided to try what he thought was
acid, and obviously I didn't know this at the time. But he would never have tried
something he knew was that dangerous."
Police are also investigating the death of a n 18-year-old Arizona State University
student who died earlier this month after taking what authorities believe was a hit of
N-bomb.
It can be produced as a liquid or powder or as tabs on blotter paper. Because it's
privately produced by myriad drug cookers, its potency varies widely, authorities said.
"What you have is some amateur chemists who are trying to change the formulation
... to try to stay ahead of the law," Scottsdale police spokesman Sgt. Mark Clark told
The Arizona Republic. (http://www .azcentral.com/new s/arizona/articles/20130503phoenix-area-n-bombdrug-stirs-f ear.html?nclick_ check=1)
The synthetic drug's nicknames, with the exception of "Smiles," come from
abbreviations of the chemicals used to manufacture it.
Writing on the Erowid web site (http://www.erowid .org/experiences/exp.cgi?
S1=540&S2=-1&C1=7&Str=) , where drug users can post their firsthand experiences with
illegal drugs, a poster identifying himself as a n 18-year-old male described ending u p
in the hospital after his first experience with the synthetic drug.
He spent four days in a n induced coma after doctors could not stop his seizures, he
posted earlier this year.
"This was an experience I'm glad I had, in a way," he wrote. "Not the fact that it
could have killed (me) - but that now I know don't sniff things we don't know
about, kids."
On a mobile device? Click here (http://landing.newsine.com/shared/video .html?
vcid=24188987&freew heel=90051 &sitesection=nydailynew s)
With News Wire Services
dhastings@nydailynews.com
Original URL:
http.:/ /www.nvdailvnews.com/news/national/new-synthetic-hallucinogen-n-bomb-killing
users-cops-article-1.1336327 ?print
21- ar-old dies after one drop of new synthetic drug at Voodoo Fest
9/13/13
ola
. n
'e\Ierything New 0 rlean s
21-year-old dies after one drop of ne w synthetic drug at Voodoo
Fest
Naomi Mart in, NO LA.com
Email the author
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Times- Picayune By Naomi Martin, NO LA.com
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Times- Picayune
on Twitter
on November 01, 2012 at 9:07 PM, updated November 01, 2012 at 10:55 PM
"It's called research chemicals, and everyone out there in the festival is the guinea pig." -- Jarod Brignac, 24
The best friends had traveled together to music festivals all over the country. Sometimes, they would take
drugs. But they had one rule: Never accept drugs from strangers.
But on Saturday, after a night drinking vodka-Red Bulls at Voodoo Festival at
City Park, 21-year-old Clayton Otwell, of Little Rock, Ark., apparently forgot his
rule, said Mandie Newell, his best friend and companion at the festival.
A stranger, wanting to repay Otwell for helping find his cell phone, offered
Otwell a free dose of 25-I, a new synthetic hallucinogenic drug. As Newell
watched, her friend knelt and the stranger plopped a single drop from a vial into
Otwell's nose.
Otwell immediately started babbling incoherently, Newell said. She got him to the medical tent at the
festival, but within 30 minutes, he had a seizure and never regained consciousness. Taken to Tulane
University Hospital, he was placed on life support Saturday night; he died Tuesday.
" I honestly don't know why he took it," Newell said a few days after Otwell's death. 11 I guess the drinking
impaired his judgment on whether or not he should take it. I think he just felt really good for helping the kid
find his phone and he trusted him."
Otwell was one of at least three people treated for 25-I overdoses during Voodoo Festival weekend, one
local emergency room doctor said, noting that friends of all three had indicated it was their first time taking
the drug.
Otwell's friends said dealers at Voodoo Fest had been offering people doses of 25-I all weekend, marketing
it as artificial LSD or artificial mescaline. "This weekend, it was everywhere," said Jarod Brignac, 24, who
also was with Otwell at the festival. "The people had bottles and bottles of it; they were walking through
the crowd, trying to make a dime off people at the festival."
The drug, sometimes called "N-Bomb" for its chemical composition 251-NBOMe, is an extremely potent
synthetic substance that the Drug Enforcement Administration considers analogous to LSD and therefore
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9/13/13
21-year-old dies after one drop of new synthetic drug at Voodoo Fest
illegal in all 50 states, said DEA Special Agent Bob Bell.
Around 2009, Bell said, many academic research papers were published regarding the pharmacological
effects of synthetic compounds. Since then, those so-called "research drugs" have proliferated in the United
States, Bell said, in part because of a widespread misconception that they are safe and legal. He said that for
the most part, the drugs are coming in from other countries, but are sometimes made in home labs in
the U.S. Synthetic drugs have grown popular especially among people who have to pass regular drug
screenings, including athletes and soldiers, because the drugs are not detectable on current drug screens,
DEA officia Is said.
"They're purported as legal and safe, but they're anything but, and in many instances, they're more
dangerous than any of the illicit drugs we're all used to," Bell said.
It's hard to pinpoint when 25-I first appeared on the scene, but 2012 has seen an uptick in 25-I-related
overdoses and deaths, Bell said. Two teenagers in Grand Forks, N.D. and a 16-year-old boy in Sacramento,
Calif., are believed to have died from 25-I overdoses earlier this year, DEA officials said.
Until this past weekend's Voodoo Festival, however, one New Orleans emergency room doctor said he had
never heard of the drug. One of the overdose patients had a vial labeled "25-I" that doctors were able to
research so they could have a better idea of how to try and treat that patient, a doctor said.
"They have a seizure, lose consciousness," said Dr. Joseph Lasky, a Tulane emergency room doctor. "Long
term effects range from death on one extreme, t o , well -- as far as fully recover, I don't know."
The potency of the drug is intense from the onset, said Brignac, who said he has taken 25-I once. " I t
disorients you very, very quickly," he said. "W ithin 20 minutes, the lights from a stage at the other side of
the festival are fully starting to take over your vision. It's very, very strong to the point of not wanting to
move and you start panicking."
At Voodoo and other music festivals, Brignac said, drug dealers do not warn people about the drug's
possible effects. "It's called research chemicals, and everyone out there in the festival is the guinea pig,"
Brignac said. "How human beings can do it to one another is beyond me."
Meanwhile, Otwell's mother, Dayna Duncan, said she hopes others will learn from her son's death. Parents
should "warn their kids about this drug since it's so new and no one knows about it, so we can save lives,"
the grieving mother said.
As for the stranger who gave her son the fatal drop of 25-I, an overwhelmed Duncan said she hoped
eventually justice would be served.
" I think he needs to be exposed," she said, "and held accountable for his actions."
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213
Drug Enforcement Administration
Office of Diversion Control
Drug & Chemical Evaluation Section
251-NBOMe, 25C-NBOMe, and 258-NBOMe
(Street names: N-bomb, Smiles, 251, 25C, 258)
August 2013
DEA/OD/ODE
Introduction:
251-NBOMe, 25C-NB0Me, and 258-NBOMe are three
synthetic substances recently encountered on the designer
drug market. These substances are sold online and
through illicit channels, commonly purported to be illicit
hallucinogens such as LSD. 251-NBOMe, 25C-NB0Me,
and 258-NBOMe target the same 5-HT2A (serotonin)
receptor as many other hallucinogens, including Schedule I
hallucinogens like LSD, 2C-I, 2C-C, and 2C-B.
These substances have been encountered as
powders, liquid solutions, laced on edible items, and
soaked onto blotter papers.
Chemistry:
The chemical structures for 251-NBOMe 1 , 25C
NBOMe2, and 25B-NB0Me 3 and the Schedule I
substances 2C-I, 2C-C, and 2C-B are shown below. The
two set of substances differ by the addition of a 2methoxybenzyl group on the nitrogen (NBOMe).
X=I; 251-NBOMe
X=CI; 25C-NB0Me
X=Br; 258-NBOMe
251-NBOMe, 25C-NBOMe, and 258-NBOMe for human use.
Available data suggests that extremely small amounts of these
substances can cause seizures, cardiac and respiratory arrest,
and death.
Licit Uses:
251-NBOMe, 25C-NB0Me, and 258-NBOMe were
previously investigated as research tools to probe the location
of 5-HT2A receptors in the central nervous system of nonhuman
mammals.
Illicit Uses:
251-NBOMe, 25C-NBOMe, and 258-NBOMe are abused
by a variety of delivery methods for their hallucinogenic
properties. Some suppliers may purport or mistake these
substances to be LSD or other Schedule I hallucinogens.
User Population:
Information on user population in the U.S. is limited, and
includes information from law enforcement encounters,
emergency departments, medical examiners, and drug user
internet forums. Emergency departments continue to publish
cases of severe toxicity due to these substances. Reports from
medical examiners and toxicology labs link some combination
of 251-NBOMe, 25C-NBOMe, and 258-NBOMe to the death of
at least 14 individuals, aged 15 to 29 years, in the U.S.
between March 2012 and April 2013.
Illicit Distribution:
X=I; 2C-I
X=CI; 2C-C
X=Br; 2C-B
These six compounds belong to a structural class of
substances sharing a core phenethylamine structure. When
the phenyl of the phenethylamine is substituted with
methoxy (-OCH3 ) groups at the 2- and 5-positions, they are
known as 2C compounds, denoting the presence of two
carbon group between the phenyl and amine.
The System to Retrieve Information from Drug Evidence
(STRIDE), a federal database for the seized drugs analyzed by
DEA forensic laboratories, and the National Forensic
Laboratory Information System (NFLIS), a system that collects
drug analysis information from state and local forensic
laboratories contain 625 reports for 251-NBOMe, 114 reports
for 25C-NB0Me, and 16 reports for 258-NBOMe between
June 2011 and March 2013. Bulk quantities of powdered
material and blotter paper laced with some combination of 251NBOMe, 25C-NBOMe,
and 258-NBOMe
have been
encountered.
Pharmacology:
Control Status
251-NBOMe, 25C-NBOMe, and 258-NBOMe, like 2C-I,
2C-C, and 2C-B, selectively bind and show activity at the
5-HT2A (serotonin) receptor in the central nervous system.
The addition of the NBOMe group has been shown to
substantially enhance the potency of these compounds.
There are no published studies on the safety of
251-NBOMe, 25C-NBOMe, and 258-NBOMe are not
currently scheduled under the Controlled Substances Act
(CSA).
However, if intended for human consumption,
251-NBOMe, 25C-NBOMe, and 258-NBOMe may each be
treated as a "controlled substance analogue" under the CSA
pursuant to 21 U.S.C §§ 802(32)(A) and 813.
1
Name: 2-(4-iodo-2,5-dimethoxyphenyl)-N-(2-methoxybenzyl)ethanamine
Name: 2-(4-chloro-2,5-dimethoxyphenyl)-N-(2-methoxybenzyl)ethanamine
3 Name: 2-(4-bromo-2,5-dimethoxyphenyl)-N-(2-methoxybenzyl)ethanamine
2
Comments and additional information are welcomed by the Drug and Chemical
Evaluation Section; Fax 202-353-1263, telephone 202-307-7183, or E-mail
ODE@usdoj.gov.